Many of you want great relationships but all you want to do is take.
There’s nothing great that comes out of always taking. Even friendships but you want life long partners while being a leach.
If you like stay online and let people deceive you that you are some sort of prize that no one can get tired of.
I think it's unfortunate that the New York Knicks are two wins away from ending a championship drought that has existed for five decades, and that's not what we're talking about right now. Knicks fans have to see the discourse dominated by Donald Trump.
Then fans have to inconvenience themselves on a normal work day when they want to go support their team.
And then you have conservatives that are pissed that people are upset that they have to jump through hoops because Trump wants to attend a game that he himself said essentially that he could have watched at home "semi-free".
Did I mention that this is not a weekend? This is after work, so there's going to be a lot of Knicks fans. They have to figure out work arrangements To get to the game to do the TSA-style check.
Michelle Obama has spoken fairly regularly about how the Obama’s would miss out on opportunities so they would not inconvenience the public because they were in the White House to serve others.
As a longtime fan of Divorce Court, I've noticed a recurring pattern.
Most marriages end in divorce due to three main reasons:
1. Money
2. Infidelity
3. Lack of sex
If couples can solve this, they've a higher chance of successful union.
About a year after our relationship ended, my ex contacted me and wanted to know if I would like to try again.
The request caught me off guard.
The relationship had ended because she had an affair, and although I had once loved her deeply, that chapter of my life was long behind me.
She seemed surprised that I wasn't interested. In her mind, the fact that I had loved her so much should have been enough reason to try again.
When I reminded her that she had cheated, she defended herself by saying I was never around.
What she conveniently forgot was that I spent most of that relationship working two jobs so she could stay home comfortably.
After a long silence, she asked if I ever missed her or wondered what our future might have looked like together.
I told her the truth, "Every morning, I wake up grateful that you're no longer part of my life."
The silence that followed lasted only a moment before it was replaced by a stream of angry insults.
I laughed, ended the call, and got on with my day.
"Picks"? You clowns have audacity. That's the Director-General of the World Trade Organization and the first woman and African to hold that position that you're talking about, yet you're assuming she would allow herself to be "picked" by a failure who has never headed any executive office.